Definition Word of Mouth Marketing. Description.

Word of Mouth Marketing is a marketing technique based on the effects of direct interpersonal communication.

The concept of Word of Mouth is deeply rooted in the nature of human beings as a form of referring the information from person to person. The concept has been unconsciously used for marketing purposes for hundreds of years.

Since the 1970s many marketers started recognizing the benefits of personal referral in relation to a product or a service of a company. Hence the name Word of Mouth Marketing or its acronym WOMM.

Origin of Word of Mouth Marketing. History

A recognized pioneer of this Marketing tool is George Abraham Silverman, a Harvard-graduated mathematician and statistician who worked for US government prior and during the Second World War. In the early 1970s he created a word of mouth model called “teleconferenced peer influence groups” that he lately discussed in his 2001 book “The Secrets of Word of Mouth Marketing”. Silverman gathered a group of physicians to make them discuss new pharmaceutical products while he experienced the power of influence of members’ feedbacks on the entire group, appreciating its benefits.

Building from Silverman’s ideas many marketers from disparate industries engaged behaviors aimed at leveraging the power of positive referrals made directly from person to person, especially within Pressure Groups. In the context of doubtful effects of social influence exerted by mass communication and consumers traditional reluctant to conventional advertising, the communication focus of marketers shifted from traditional top-down marketing campaigns to more naïve and original approaches.

Opinion Leaders

The power of WOMM is based on the high level of social influence credited to Opinion Leaders and in general by individuals within their network of friends, family, etc… See: Two Steps Flow Model, Persuasion Theory and Persuasion Techniques. Since opinion leaders are more exposed to any form of external communication, they have become the target of most of marketing word of mouth campaigns. Many marketers recognized the strong influential power of opinion leaders and used it to boost the diffusion of innovation.

On the other side, the main concern of WOMM was originally to whom should the messages be addressed to benefit later on from the viral effect of word of mouth, and how those people should be reached. To address this issue knowledge is required on how to run an effective marketing word of mouth campaign. Unfortunately, in word of mouth campaigns opinion leaders can not be easily spotted and reached at local level by a company’s marketers. The main three problems to reach them, are following:

Attempt to identify people who are most willing to share their experiences and disclose their opinions.

Work hard to reach high level of customer satisfaction. Happy customers will be highly self-motivated to refer their positive experience to other peers.

Gather and analyze information about how opinions are shared, where, via which channels (i.e. internet, events, workplaces, schools, home, etc…) and when in time.

Improve the two-sided dialogue with customers and proactively listen to them. It is fundamental to promote transparent communication, acknowledge consumers’ intelligence and avoid any unethical or one-sided quick win.

Create simple tools that facilitate the referral process. Start up incentive programs that can convert customers into marketers, create rooms for conversation about the benefits of a product or a service through events and offer free sampling to selected members of a customer network.

Make sure that most influential people within certain target groups feel comfortable about a company’s products and services.

Limitations of a Word of Mouth Marketing Campaign

The success of a WOMM campaign can be hard to measure in the short term.

Due to its nature, integrating word of mouth strategies into traditional marketing campaigns is difficult, because the concept of word-of-mouth is somehow indefinite, and its supporters don’t welcome traditional mass communication.

To be more effective it is advisable to perform a product / market analysis before implementing a WOMM campaign. Some researches argue that the effectiveness of a WOMM grows somewhere between the growth and the maturity stage of a product life cycle, others argue it is more effective when the adopters overcome the number of non adopters.

Differences Word-of-Mouth and E-WOM
Word-of-mouth is an often used concept in advertising practices. One major development since the internet development is the (relative) new concept of Electronic Word-of-Mouth.
- The old, regular Word-of-Mouth (WOM) is defined as: 'inform...

The Influence of Word of Mouth Marketing
Indeed word of mouth is the primary factor behind 20 to 50% of all purchasing decisions.
Its influence is greatest when consumers are buying a product for the first time or when products are relatively expensive. These factors tend to make peopl...

Motives for Word of Mouth Communication
Word of mouth communication happens as a result of social awareness, individual maturity and emotions.
Sometimes a person without any idea of the concept starts it due to emotion.
Of course people also do it for back stabbing at work which ...

Contagious: Berger's STEPPS for Creating Viral Messages
A key assumption of viral marketing is that when a message reaches a receptive person, he will be "infected". As long as (on average) each infected person passes the message to more than one other person (i.e., the basic 'reproductive rate' is...

Word of Mouth Marketing Cases and Examples
Hi, do you know a remarkable case or an interesting example of the use of word of mouth marketing?Please share it by entering a reaction.
Thanks for contributing...!...

Which consumers are best able to influence others in social groups? What characteristics and what factors identify those consumers with the greates...
Usage (application): Social Media Marketing, Social Influence, Opinion Leadership

Four Ways in Which People Experience Any Organization

The reputation of an organization depends mainly from the way that the organization’s constit...
Usage (application): Corporate Reputation, Customer Perception, Customer Experience Management, Online Reputation

Presentation about Group Influences, including various related concepts such as the Social Comparison Theory and Word-of Mouth Communication. The pres...
Usage (application): Groupthink, Group Dynamics, Word of Mouth Marketing, Sales, Opinion Leadership, Convincing People, Persuation

The Internet / Social Media Revolution

Video shows how fast social media is growing. And gives a clear status of the position of social media by 2014.
Great starter for a discussion, p...
Usage (application): Social Media, Internet Strategy, Internet Impact, Digital Revolution